Michael Saylor, the all-too-serious chairman of what used to be called MicroStrategy but now prefers to go by Strategy-because apparently, words matter-has decided it’s time to shake things up. He’s aiming for a cool $100 billion in Bitcoin-related magic, because why not add a splash of reckless optimism to an already volatile cocktail? 🥂
His latest genius move? Introducing perpetual preferred stock-yes, “perpetual,” meaning it won’t die, much like the dreams of most startup founders-branded “Stretch,” because apparently, boring names are so last century. These things don’t mature, can defer dividends, and provide enough ambiguity to make even the most seasoned investor squirm. Think of it as the financial equivalent of a mystery flavor jellybean-except it’s not a jellybean and the flavor could be anything from “mildly profitable” to “bankruptcy, in disguise.”
Saylor’s Bitcoin Credit Model: The Frank Sinatra of Finance
Forget the tired old methods of selling stock or issuing bonds-Saylor is yanking the financial rug out from under them. Instead, he’s banking on “Stretch,” which offers variable dividends and no voting rights, making it the wallflower at the financial prom: neither debt nor equity but somehow still promising to help buy more Bitcoin. Because what’s more fun than raising billions on a securities product that sounds like it was designed by a finance student after happy hour? 🍸
Within the next four years, Saylor plans to retire billions in convertible notes, cut back on common stock sales, and lean heavily on “Stretch,” aiming high enough to raise “$100 billion… or even $200 billion” if enough people buy into this fairy tale. (Spoiler: They might.)
High-Yield Risks: Hold On Tight!
This year alone, Strategy pulled in roughly $6 billion via four preferred offerings, with a recent $2.5 billion chunk being one of the biggest crypto capital raises since someone decided crypto wasn’t just a pyramid scheme. According to Bank of America’s Michael Youngworth, this retail-driven approach is about as common as unicorns, which is to say, very rare and slightly terrifying. 🦄
But here’s the rub: Bitcoin doesn’t pay dividends, so these hefty yields-often between 8% and 10%-are kind of like expecting a cactus to tap dance. Plus, maintaining those payments in a market that swings more wildly than a toddler on espresso might turn the whole thing into a financial version of Jenga. Critics, including short-seller Jim Chanos, are calling these “crazy,” which is generous considering the damn thing isn’t even cumulative. Basically, it’s a high-wire act without a safety net-except it’s made of “potentially high-yield” and a dash of “what could possibly go wrong?!”
Bitcoin, by the way, is hanging around at $117,260-down from an eye-popping $124,400, which was the all-time high earlier this week. But let’s not forget: in 2023, it’s up 101%. Because when in doubt, buy more chaos, right?
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2025-08-16 09:08